SYNOPSIS

DESCRIPTION

The atkbd driver, together with the atkbdc driver, provides access to the AT 84 keyboard or
the AT enhanced keyboard which is connected to the AT keyboard controller.
This driver is required for the console driver syscons(4) or vt(4).
There can be only one atkbd device defined in the kernel configuration file. This device
also requires the atkbdc keyboard controller to be present. The irq number must always be
1; there is no provision of changing the number.
FunctionKeys
The AT keyboard has a number of function keys. They are numbered as follows and can be
associated with strings by the kbdcontrol(1) command. You can use a keyboard map file (see
kbdmap(5)) to map them to arbitrary keys, particularly the functions in the range from 65 to
96 which are not used by default.
Function Key number Function Key
1, 2,...12 F1, F2,... F12
13, 14,...24 Shift+F1, Shift+F2,... Shift+F12
25, 26,...36 Ctl+F1, Ctl+F2,... Ctl+F12
37, 38,...48 Shift+Ctl+F1, Shift+Ctl+F2,... Shift+Ctl+F12
49 Home and Numpad 7 (without NumLock)
50 Up Arrow and Numpad 8 (without NumLock)
51 Page Up and Numpad 9 (without NumLock)
52 Numpad -
53 Left Arrow and Numpad 4 (without NumLock)
54 Numpad 5 (without NumLock)
55 Right Arrow and Numpad 6 (without NumLock)
56 Numpad +
57 End and Numpad 1 (without NumLock)
58 Down Arrow and Numpad 2 (without NumLock)
59 Page Down and Numpad 3 (without NumLock)
60 Ins and Numpad 0 (without NumLock)
61 Del
62 Left GUI Key
63 Right GUI Key
64 Menu
65, 66,...96 free (not used by default)
See the man page for the kbdcontrol(1) command for how to assign a string to the function
key.

DRIVERCONFIGURATION

KernelConfigurationOptions
The following kernel configuration options control the atkbd driver.
ATKBD_DFLT_KEYMAP
This option sets the default, built-in keymap of the atkbd driver to the named
keymap. See EXAMPLES below.
KBD_DISABLE_KEYMAP_LOAD
The keymap can be modified by the kbdcontrol(1) command. This option will
disable this feature and prevent the user from changing key assignment.
DriverFlags
The atkbd driver accepts the following driver flags. They can be set either in
/boot/device.hints, or else from within the boot loader (see loader(8)).
bit 0 (FAIL_IF_NO_KBD)
By default the atkbd driver will install even if a keyboard is not actually connected
to the system. This option prevents the driver from being installed in this
situation.
bit 1 (NO_RESET)
When this option is given, the atkbd driver will not reset the keyboard when
initializing it. It may be useful for laptop computers whose function keys have
special functions and these functions are forgotten when the keyboard is reset.
bit 2 (ALT_SCANCODESET)
Certain keyboards, such as those on some ThinkPad models, behave like the old XT
keyboard and require this option.
bit 3 (NO_PROBE_TEST)
When this option is given, the atkbd driver will not test the keyboard port during the
probe routine. Some machines hang during boot when this test is performed.

EXAMPLES

The atkbd driver requires the keyboard controller atkbdc. Thus, the kernel configuration
file should contain the following lines.
device atkbdc
device atkbd
The following example shows how to set the default, built-in keymap to jp.106.kbd.
device atkbdc
options ATKBD_DFLT_KEYMAP
makeoptions ATKBD_DFLT_KEYMAP=jp.106
device atkbd
In both cases, you also need to have following lines in /boot/device.hints.
hint.atkbdc.0.at="isa"
hint.atkbdc.0.port="0x060"
hint.atkbd.0.at="atkbdc"
hint.atkbd.0.irq="1"